On Mon, 2017-11-06 at 08:43 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 11/06/17 08:31, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> > On Mon, 2017-11-06 at 08:09 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
> > > On 11/06/17 05:30, François Patte wrote:
> > > > Does anyone have some experience in building a NAS --- stocking and
> > > > broadcasting multimedia stuff on home network --- using fedora?
> > > 
> > > In the past, yes.  But then more, and varied, devices were bought.  
> > > Android devices,
> > > SmartTV, etc.  Then friends learned what I had and asked for access.  And 
> > > knew the
> > > space needed to be expanded.  Looking around I found very good options 
> > > for dedicated
> > > NAS at low prices.  Included in the offerings were Android and Apple apps 
> > > to make
> > > access easy with a nice end user experience.  Things like thumbnails for 
> > > TV shows and
> > > Movies, the ability to mark them watched.  Also, the system will download 
> > > and in the
> > > apps display descriptions of the show/episode or movie.  And a bunch of 
> > > other stuff. 
> > > So, for me, I didn't see the need to reinvent the wheel and then maintain 
> > > it.  That
> > > wasn't my goal.
> > > 
> > > I spend less than US$ 400 for a 2 bay unit to take advantage of RAID.
> > > 
> > > Just something to consider.
> > 
> > That would be the cost *without* the disk drives, right? All the same,
> > I'm broadly on the same page. Unless the OP has a suitable box lying
> > around, it's reasonable to get an off-the-shelf NAS for this kind of
> > thing. Just be aware that most of the cheaper units have anemic CPUs
> > that may not be up to transcoding high-quality video for multiple
> > streaming users.  There's a Plex guide here:
> > 
> > https://support.plex.tv/hc/en-us/articles/201373793
> > 
> > which should give an idea of the kind of thing to look out for, even if
> > not using Plex.
> 
> No, it was US$400 including 2-3TB drives.  I got a Synology.  I thought about 
> a
> higher end model but I didn't have a need for transcoding.

That's about what I paid for my Iomega with 2x1TB Seagate drives about
8 years ago. I since have had to replace both drives with WD units as
they failed, luckily not at the same time so RAID-0 saved me. I did
look at getting a new NAS but wasn't convinced the benefit would be
worth the cost. I finally figured I didn't actually need RAID for the
media (as it all has alternative sources), just for the data backup, so
I got a new drive for my PC, moved the media onto it, and as a bonus
configured my old PC's drive for my Windows VM, which I can also now
dual-boot if necessary. But everyone's requirements are different.

poc
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